December inflation clocked in at 2.7% year-over-year—right where economists had penciled it in. The data aligns with consensus forecasts, offering no major surprises as markets calibrate expectations around future monetary policy trajectories and asset valuations.
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DefiVeteran
· 9h ago
No surprise is the biggest surprise. This wave is stable.
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SerumDegen
· 13h ago
no surprises = no alpha leak = markets already priced it in yesterday lol... classic cascade of "we saw this coming" while leverage unwinds elsewhere. capitulation's gonna be boring this quarter ngl
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SmartContractPhobia
· 01-15 00:02
Uh, 2.7%? That's the usual expected move, really boring.
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RektButAlive
· 01-13 18:09
2.7%, is that all? Feels pretty boring, just as expected.
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MetaMaskVictim
· 01-13 18:09
Hmm, the data fits the expectations so "perfectly" that I feel a bit uneasy...
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BloodInStreets
· 01-13 18:08
2.7%? This is like using a microscope to find stimulation. The data being so "perfect" makes it even more unsettling...
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PumpDetector
· 01-13 17:59
2.7%? lol they literally just... called it. no divergence, no whale accumulation tells, nothing. markets gonna sit flat til someone actually does something unexpected. reading between the lines here—this is the calm before they start talking rate cuts again 🤷
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MoneyBurnerSociety
· 01-13 17:57
Another perfect face-to-face, why is it that no one can step on it correctly?
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GateUser-74b10196
· 01-13 17:48
Damn, another 2.7%. Are economists really that accurate? It feels more like they're just telling stories.
December inflation clocked in at 2.7% year-over-year—right where economists had penciled it in. The data aligns with consensus forecasts, offering no major surprises as markets calibrate expectations around future monetary policy trajectories and asset valuations.